Standing screen display size | 9.7 Inches |
---|---|
Screen Resolution | 2048x1536 |
Max Screen Resolution | 2048 x 1536 |
Processor | 8032 |
RAM | 4 GB LPDDR3 |
Hard Drive | SSD |
Graphics Coprocessor | Mali-T864 |
Chipset Brand | ARM |
Card Description | Dedicated |
Graphics Card Ram Size | 1 |
Wireless Type | Bluetooth, 802.11ac |
Number of USB 2.0 Ports | 1 |
Number of USB 3.0 Ports | 1 |
Average Battery Life (in hours) | 9 Hours |
Acer D651N-K9WT 9.7IN 4GB 32GB OP1
Brand | acer |
Model Name | Tab 10 |
Memory Storage Capacity | 32 GB |
Screen Size | 9.7 Inches |
Display Resolution Maximum | 2048 x 1536 |
About this item
- Processor Manufacturer: Rockchip
- Processor Type: OP1
- Processor Model: RK3399
- Processor Speed: 2 GHz
- 64-bit Processing: Yes
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PRODUCT CERTIFICATION (1)
Recycled Content Certification for Electrical and Electronic Equipment products have at least 10-50% recycled content, based on product type and environmental impact.
What's in the box
Product Description
BRINGING CLASSROOMS TO LIFE Managing Expectations With the combination of planned support for Google Expeditions AR and easy administration, students and staff have a better experience. Develop Perfection A host of technological features combine to make this a fantastic state-of-the-art tablet. More from the Manufacturer. Manufacturer: Acer, Manufacturer Part Number: NX. H0BAA. 001. Brand Name: Acer. Product Line: Chromebook Tab 10. Product Series: D651N. Product Model: D651N-K9WT. Product Name: Chromebook Tab 10 D651N-K9WT Chromebook Tablet. Product Type: Chromebook Tablet. [Processor & Chipset] Processor Manufacturer: Rockchip. Processor Type: OP1. Processor Model: RK3399. Processor Speed: 2 GHz. 64-bit Processing: Yes. [Memory] Standard Memory: 4 GB. Memory Technology: LPDDR3. Memory Card Reader: Yes. [Storage] Flash Memory Capacity: 32 GB. [Display & Graphics] Screen Size: 9. 7". Display Screen Type: Active Matrix TFT Color LCD. Display Screen Technology: In-plane Switching (IPS) Technology. Aspect Ratio: 4: 3. Screen Mode: QXGA. Screen Resolution: 2048 x 1536. Backlight Technology: LED. Touchscreen: Yes. Digitizer: Yes. Graphics Controller Manufacturer: ARM. Graphics Controller Model: Mali-T864. Graphics Memory Technology: LPDDR3. Graphics Memory Accessibility: Shared. TV Card: No. [Network & Communication] Wireless LAN: Yes. Wireless LAN Standard: IEEE 802. 11ac. Bluetooth: Yes. Bluetooth Standard: Bluetooth 4. 1. [Interfaces/Ports] USB Type-C: Yes. USB Type-C Detail: USB Type-C port supporting: USB 3. 1 Gen 1 (up to 5 Gbps)DisplayPort over USB-CUSB charging 5/9/15/20 V; 3 ADC-in port 5 or 9 or 15 or 20 V; 45 W. Headphone/Microphone Combo Port: Yes. [Input Devices] Keyboard Type: Touchscreen Keyboard. Pointing Device Type: Stylus. [Built-in Devices] Sensor Type: Accelerometer. Front Camera/Webcam: Yes. Front Camera/Webcam Resolution: 2 Megapixel
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Product information
Technical Details
Brand | acer |
---|---|
Series | Tab 10 |
Item model number | NX.H0BAA.001 |
Operating System | Chrome OS |
Item Weight | 1.2 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 9.4 x 6.8 x 0.4 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 9.4 x 6.8 x 0.4 inches |
Color | Indigo Blue |
Rear Webcam Resolution | 2 MP |
Number of Processors | 1 |
Computer Memory Type | Unknown |
Flash Memory Size | 32 |
Hard Drive Interface | ATA-4 |
Hard Drive Rotational Speed | 1 |
Optical Drive Type | BD-R |
Power Source | Corded Electric |
Voltage | 20 Volts |
Additional Information
ASIN | B07CY2SG9J |
---|---|
Customer Reviews |
3.6 out of 5 stars |
Date First Available | March 26, 2018 |
Warranty & Support
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Top reviews from the United States
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If you will exclusivey use your tablet as a tablet, then go with Android or IOS. ChromeOS makes sense when the keyboard is truly optional.
When you don't need the keybaord, it is about half the weight of the thinnest convertibles. If the times you want a desktop are associated
with desks then you can use the USB-C port to dock with power and peripherals there, and you end up with a Desktop tablet with a full
Desktop browser and a windowed operating system.
Performance is mediocre, Speedometer 2.0 in the low 20s. You can browse, send email, run apps and not worry about it. But if you abusively
pile up tabs you'll notice the slowdown.
Android Apps run well, unless you shift to Dev mode to enable Linux apps.
Linux apps run well even while Dev mode clobbers Android apps.
The stylus is small, to fit in the enclosure for it, but very functional. It works great for navigation, handwriting and diagramming.
I suspect it is not usable for artwork, but then neither am I.
The 1.2 lbs is very light, and the textured back makes for easy handling.
It works with both bluetooth keyboards and wired keyboards via USB-C multi-port adapters. You can mirror your display via USB-C as well,
but the software does no really support dual displays adequately. For example you can't drag a window to the second display.
USB-C Ethernet works well, as does Power Delivery and USB-A peripherals including USB-Drives, keyboards and mice.
If you have no idea why you would ever dock your tablet, then go with a pure tablet. If you have no idea why you would ever
walk around without carrying a keyboard with you then go with a convertible chromrebook. But if "dockable tablet" makes sense
to you and you do not need an uber-powerful chrome device then this can be a good option for you.
Even if it doesn't reboot, it's almost impossible to use, as switching between apps just kills the poor little thing. It has NO computing power, such that the easiest tasks completely overwhelms the pitiful thing.
Just opening the kindle or the google play books to actually read a book kills the tablet. And since they are my most used apps, it turns out this was a complete waste of money. If it could actually run these applications, it would be a pretty cool device. Other than a completely underpowered CPU, the hardware is pretty nice. Nice, but useless.
I'm not convinced Chrome OS is ready for a tablet device. I tried using the kindle web app instead of the kindle android app, and since it's a tablet you have no cursor to move around, so some of the UI just will not work - you can't update the text options, or manipulate the slider to move around in the book. So, web apps are hard to use, and since the android apps use too much CPU, that makes even good web apps impossible. Or least web apps not optimized for tablet operation. The feedly app relies on a cursor as well, so you have to use the android feedly app.
Given constraints like that, it makes trying to avoid android apps to not overload the CPU kind of hard. Which makes the device even more useless.
It's completely useless.
The biggest issue I have is with it's implementation of Chrome OS on a tablet. Chrome OS is still very much a desktop OS and isn't optimized for a tablet. The lack of a physical keyboard just make things a little more difficult to do. I found the onscreen keyboard to be very frustrating; at times I couldn't get text to copy and paste into an app. It would randomly capitalize the first letter in Android apps with no way to change this behavior. Combine this with how Android Apps work with Chrome OS and it was just not usable for me.
If you want a Chrome Book, get one with physical keyboard. It you want an Android tablet, get an Android Tablet.
Most Android apps run well, but slightly slower than on my Samsung Galaxy S9. Chrome runs very fast on this machine, almost as fast as on my MacBook Pro from work.
The included fine-point Stylus works amazingly well. I can draw free-hand on my slides fast and easy now.
An extra with Chrome OS is that it supports Linux, and "apt" comes installed. And with "apt", both VNC viewer and server simply just work right after installation.
My company uses Google Cloud, so I can do all things on this Chrome book. For work documents, for Android games, and for coding via VNC connection. It connects with my old Bluetooth 3 keyboard and fits into a recycled 10'' tablet case! I can't be happier with this all-in-one tablet that's lighter than my 13" MacBook Pro.
And did I say its screen resolution can go up to 2048 by 1536? That's more than 1080HD and almost on par with mid-end iPads.
My only complaint is Chrome OS still doesn't take full advantage of high-resolution LCD. I believe it will improve overtime as more Chrome books are improving on LCDs now. So this Chrome book will get better and more productive with time.
Top reviews from other countries
I immediately adored the stylus and hand-written notes.
I'm used to using Chrome OS on a laptop, with a mouse, and that works perfectly! On a tablet though, even with a stylus, there's definitely some frustration. Especially with my fat fingers mashing away on the touch screen. You either need some patience when navigating (particularly on full desktop web sites that load by default - Android apps are easy to navigate) or you need to order a bluetooth keyboard and mouse at the same time. This is a tablet that acts like a laptop that can run tablet apps!